I get 10641 in 3dmark2001SE using hajo's settings and all the vid driver settings turned to highest quality. I get only 12769 at defaults, so that pretty much defines "cpu limited" I think.
6800GT
Athlon XP 2000+
I'll re-run it hopefully this weekend after I rebuild my system with my just-arrived athlon 64 parts. FWIW, I plan on overclocking by approx 10% (200 FSB to approx 220 FSB) and from all accounts, this should be trivial using the parts I got. No over-volting necessary at all. Like Skuzzy said, successful overclocking is all about the details. Planning ahead and getting the right parts is how it all starts, and hopefully 4 months of research was enough
I did skip on the currently very popular TCCD chip memory in favor of crucial ballistix, but since I'm not going for extreme overclocking I should get the results I'm aiming at. If I'm careful, I think 250 fsb should be easily attainable with the parts I've purchased but I don't know if I'll push it that hard.
The best bet for me is to find out how fast the memory will go by reducing the cpu multiplier and slowly increasing the FSB, then backing everything off and creep the cpu multiplier back up to find out how fast the cpu wants to go at stock voltages, then back everything off from the max settings to try to keep system reliability up. Anywhere above 2.2 ghz and 220 fsb on the memory is "gravy" as far as I'm concerned because that would be a 10% overclock across the board and the price difference to buy that speed instead of what I bought is around $200.
My 6800GT also runs quite happily at 6800 Ultra speeds but at around $150 lower price, but I'm not running it that fast in hopes of having it last longer.
Anyhow, get the right parts and don't be greedy, and an overclocked system can be just as reliable as a system running at stock speeds. It might even be more reliable if you started with high quality "overclocking quality" parts instead of super cheap bits.